targeted covalent inhibitors: a risk-benefit perspectivem. h. potashman and m. e. duggan, j. med....
TRANSCRIPT
Targeted Covalent Inhibitors: A Risk-Benefit Perspective
2014 AAPS Annual Meeting and Exposition
San Diego, CA, November 4, 2014
Thomas A. Baillie
School of Pharmacy
University of Washington
Seattle, WA
Covalent Drugs are not New !
CO2H
O
O
Aspirin - 1897
Inhibits cyclooxygenase enzymes
through acetylation of Ser residues
(Ser530 for COX-1 and Ser516 for
COX-2) proximal to their active sites
O
HN
O N
S
CO2H
H
O
Penicillin - 1928
Acylates active site Ser residue of
bacterial DD-transpeptidase and blocks
cell wall biosynthesis
M. H. Potashman and M. E. Duggan, J. Med. Chem., 52, 1231-1246 (2009)
What is a Targeted Covalent Inhibitor?
• A small molecule ligand that is designed a priori to covalently modify, and
thereby inhibit the function of, a specific protein target. Inhibitors of this type
can act by reversible or irreversible mechanisms
• The resulting “protein silencing” takes place in two steps:
o Non-covalent association of high affinity ligand to protein target
o Covalent reaction between electrophilic “warhead” on ligand and
specific nucleophilic center on protein
• Typically, the chemistry relies upon Michael addition of a poorly conserved
Cys-SH on the protein to an acrylamide-based warhead on the inhibitor
Potential Advantages of Targeted Covalent Inhibitors
High Potency
- Potentially very high potency with complete blockade of target
- High „biochemical efficiency‟ associated with non-equilibrium binding mechanism
- Low dose translates to decreased potential for off-target effects
Extended Duration of Action
- Dependent upon turnover of target protein versus PK of drug
- Mechanism compatible with relatively high drug clearance
- “Uncoupling” of PK and PD can translate to less frequent dosing
Applicability to Some Previously “Undruggable” Targets
- Targets with shallow binding sites; disruptors of protein-protein interactions
Ability to Directly Measure Target Occupancy and Selectivity
- Activity-based probes allow for assessment of selectivity, and of time- and
dose-dependent target occupancy in vitro and in vivo
- Development of target occupancy / biological effect relationships
Potential to Avoid Some Resistance Mechanisms
- Drug-resistant forms of EGFR (eg T790M) respond to irreversible inhibitors
D. S. Johnson et al., Future Med. Chem., 2, 949-964 (2010); J. Singh et al., Nat. Rev. Drug Discov., 10, 307-317 (2011)
A. S. Kalgutkar and D. K. Dalvie, Expert Opin. Drug Discov., 7, 561-581 (2012); R. Mah et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 24, 33-39 (2014)
Perceived Drawback of (Irreversible) Targeted
Covalent Inhibitor Approach
“The formation of a covalent bond between a small molecule
drug and its target protein has been largely avoided as a design
strategy due to risks associated with immunogenic responses
to covalently modified proteins”
• This concern derives largely from studies on chemically
reactive drug metabolites
• Caveat is that most reactive drug metabolites are highly
reactive electrophiles, in contrast to the weakly reactive
warheads found in targeted covalent inhibitors
J. Singh et al., Nat. Rev. Drug Discov., 10, 307-317 (2011)
M. C. Noe and A. M. Gilbert, Annu. Rep. Med. Chem., 47, 413-439 (2012)
Reversible Targeting of Noncatalytic Cysteines with
“Chemically Tuned” Electrophiles
I. M. Serafimova et al., Nat. Chem. Biol., 8, 471-476 (2012); S. Krishnan et al., J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 136, 12624-12630 (2014)
Reversible covalent inhibitor of RSK2
“In a nutshell, the therapeutic
applicability or the success of
irreversible binding kinase
inhibitors is dependent on
whether or not the covalent
bond can be confined solely to
the protein kinase of interest.”
T. Barf and A. Kaptein, J. Med. Chem., 55, 6243-6262 (2012)
See also: Q. Liu et al. Chem. Biol., 20, 146-159 (2013)
“Derisking” Irreversible Covalent Drugs
• Selectivity of binding to target protein is key
- Can be assessed experimentally by „activity-based protein
profiling‟, proteomics mass spectrometry, X-ray structure, etc
D. S. Johnson et al., Future Med. Chem., 2, 949-964 (2010)
• Low dose is important
- Reduced body burden of parent drug and metabolites
C. Lammert et al., Hepatology 47, 2003-2009 (2008); M. Chen et al., Hepatology, 58, 388-396 (2013)
• Minimal formation of reactive metabolites
- Ability to control reactivity of covalent drug
S. Kumar et al., Curr. Opin. Drug Discov. Develop., 11, 43-52 (2008)
Recently Approved Irreversible Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors
Ibrutinib (IMBRUVICA)
F. Cameron and M. Sanford, Drugs, 74, 263-271 (2014); S. Parmar et al., Pharm. Ther., 39, 483-519 (2014)
• Blocks B-cell antigen receptor signaling by irreversibly inhibiting Bruton‟s tryosine kinase (Btk)
• FDA approval for mantle-cell lymphoma (Nov 2013) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (Feb 2014)
• Tmax 1-2 hr, T½ 4-6 hr, Vdss ~10,000L
• >90% Occupancy @ 24hr after 175mg dose; recommended therapeutic dose = 420 mg/day
• Clearance mechanism: CYP3A4-mediated oxidation, excretion of metabolites in feces
• DDI with ketoconazole gave 24-fold increase in ibrutinib AUCp
Btk-Cys481
Recently Approved Irreversible Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors
Afatinib (GILOTRIF)
N
NH
N
HN
N
F
Cl
O
O
O
EGFR-Cys797
• Irreversible covalent inhibitor of EGFR and HER2
• FDA approval (2013) for metastatic NSCLC with EGFR mutations / deletions
• Tmax 3-5 hr, T½ ~ 34 hr, Vdss ~4,500L
• Recommended therapeutic dose = 40 mg/day
• Clearance mechanism: elimination unchanged into feces (metabolism to thiol adducts minor)
• Covalent binding to blood proteins
P. Stopfer et al., Cancer Chemother. Pharmacol., 69, 1051-1061 (2012); D. W. Bowles et al., Drugs Today (Barc), 49, 523-535 (2013)
Key Considerations in Adopting the Targeted Covalent
Inhibitor Approach in Drug Discovery
• Strong bioinformatics support is critical in target selection
- Non-catalytic, poorly conserved, accessible, suitably-positioned and oriented nucleophile on target
• Slow turnover rate of target protein
- Duration of PD effect is a function of de novo protein re-synthesis
• Need to optimize potency and selectivity in vitro
- Ligand: Enzyme kinetics (kinact/Ki, not IC50)
- Protein: Proteomics MS to confirm site of modification, and assess off-target reactions
- Need to assess potency and selectivity in vivo
- Activity-based protein profiling, photoaffinity labeling, PAGE and quantitative MS
- Traditional in vitro ADME and in vivo PK screens
- Less useful in compound selection than measurements of target modification and occupancy
- PK/PD relationships replaced by target occupancy/PD relationships
- GST-Mediated conjugation with GSH likely to be a common route of clearance
- Regulatory
- Similar safety requirements to traditional NCE
M. F. Moghaddam et al., Drug Metab. Lett., 7, 19-30 (2013); R. Mah et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 24, 33-39 (2014)
Conclusions
Over 40 FDA-approved drugs inhibit
their target via a covalent mechanism
The most rapidly growing therapeutic
area for targeted covalent inhibitors is
oncology
Slow turnover proteins with
appropriately positioned nucleophilic
centers are attractive targets for the
covalent inhibitor approach
Highly selective, low-dose inhibitors
that are resistant to metabolic
activation should have acceptable
safety profiles
J. Singh et al., Nature Rev. Drug Discov., 10, 307-317 (2011)